Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would definitely redshirt in your situation OP. I have a child who will start kindergarten in the fall and I would love to redshirt her, but she would be too old. I’m not worried about the missed months of preschool, I just know that this thing is far from over. While the kids may go back to school on time, it will be a very disruptive year. I imagine they will have to go back and forth from in school teaching and online learning. A May born, small boy, I would definitely wait given what the fall will look like.
I agree. The loss of preschool is no big deal, but the potential cluster F of what school will look like next year is a bigger deal.
Another possibility nobody wants to think about is that online learning might happen for more than one year. All the kids are going to be behind what they would normally be working on for their age because of the difficulties of online instruction. This is going to be even worse for the redshirted kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would definitely redshirt in your situation OP. I have a child who will start kindergarten in the fall and I would love to redshirt her, but she would be too old. I’m not worried about the missed months of preschool, I just know that this thing is far from over. While the kids may go back to school on time, it will be a very disruptive year. I imagine they will have to go back and forth from in school teaching and online learning. A May born, small boy, I would definitely wait given what the fall will look like.
I agree. The loss of preschool is no big deal, but the potential cluster F of what school will look like next year is a bigger deal.
Anonymous wrote:I would definitely redshirt in your situation OP. I have a child who will start kindergarten in the fall and I would love to redshirt her, but she would be too old. I’m not worried about the missed months of preschool, I just know that this thing is far from over. While the kids may go back to school on time, it will be a very disruptive year. I imagine they will have to go back and forth from in school teaching and online learning. A May born, small boy, I would definitely wait given what the fall will look like.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm pretty shocked that pre-K kids are reading?! Is that a thing? We're moving into the area from Germany where kids dont even get exposed to ANY academics (writing, reading, phonics) until the August AFTER their 6th birthday. The expectation in DC is that your 4 year old is a fully competent reader?!
Welcome to the DC area. While it is not an expectation for kindergarten, most children from middle-upper class families around here are pushed to read before kindergarten to “keep up with the Jones’” and say their kid is advanced. So you have kindergarten with some kids that don’t even know English and some kids already reading chapter books.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think pre-school prep really makes a difference. The big focus in K seems to be reading, so just read a lot to your kid.
I sent my early August DD to K on time this year. She's the 2nd smallest kid in the building, and has grown/learned a lot since school started. It's more likely due to the fact that she had been going to school with older groups of kids vs. babies and toddlers. Your late May kid will be fine.
Anonymous wrote:I'm pretty shocked that pre-K kids are reading?! Is that a thing? We're moving into the area from Germany where kids dont even get exposed to ANY academics (writing, reading, phonics) until the August AFTER their 6th birthday. The expectation in DC is that your 4 year old is a fully competent reader?!
Anonymous wrote:Opposite at DD’s school, which is a preschool-8th grade private. We have a 4s preschool class that usually splits between a 5s class and kindergarten, depending on birthdates, academic and behavioral readiness. Some parents of kids who would technically have been considered “redshirted” are lobbying to send them to Kindergarten instead. Our school has been virtual since early March and one of their moms said that if everyone else is 3 months “behind” an extra year doesn’t matter and that they may as well save a year of private school tuition. These are kids who would have really benefited from redshirting and I would only confess here that I hope DD does not end up in their class.
Anonymous wrote:I'm pretty shocked that pre-K kids are reading?! Is that a thing? We're moving into the area from Germany where kids dont even get exposed to ANY academics (writing, reading, phonics) until the August AFTER their 6th birthday. The expectation in DC is that your 4 year old is a fully competent reader?!